The "Silver age" city

(turn-of-the-century St. Petersburg)

This period in the city's history was both brilliant and troublesome.
It all began with the splendid coronation of Nicholas II in Moscow,
which resulted in the thousands of casualties of the Khodynka disaster,
and ended with the cruelest of wars - WWI. However, in the early
1900s St. Petersburg was obsessed with celebration.

In 1902 bureaucratic St. Petersburg celebrated 100 years of the
government reforms of Alexander I and his establishment of the ministries.

In May 1903 St Petersburg celebrated the city's 200th anniversary.
The new Troitski (Trinity) Bridge was officially opened in the presence
of the Emporer and a church service took place in Senatskaya Square
next to the Bronze Horseman, to commemorate the founder of the city.

But trouble began to brew in January 1905, when a peaceful demonstration
of workers was fired on by troops on Palace Square. This triggered
public outrage and marked the start of the 1905-07 Revolution. The
events of January 9 1905 rapidly became known as "Bloody Sunday".
On October 17 1905 Nicholas II was forced to issue a manifesto proclaiming
a number of civil rights and instituting a new parliament, consisting
of the Duma and the reformed State Council.

The opening of the Duma in 1906 gave fresh grounds for hope to
thousands of liberals in the intelligentsia. The district where
the Duma was located soon became one of the most popular residential
areas in the city. However, their hope was short lived. The government
curtailed many of these freedoms and blocked many of the Duma's
initiatives. Finally, worn down by the harships of WWI, the public's
patience waned and the revolutionary events of 1917 were set in
motion.

But before the onslaught of the 1917 Revolution, St. Petersburg
enjoyed a cultural revival which became known as the "Silver
Age" and involved many of the city's best known artists, musicians,
composers, writers and poets.

With a population of 2 million people, the modern metropolis of
St. Petersburg was to face many horrors in the coming war.

The church of the Savior on Spilled Blood

This church was built on the spot of the assassination of Alexander II, who was murdered here on March 1 of 1881 by the members of the terroristic revolutionary organization "People's Will". The church was designed by the architect Parland as a replica of St. Basil's Cathedral in Moscow.